, 'l/,r "\ 1(1 1 \-, . = i l )1 f / -i'" .;.:. Pt ;.-llf 1íi>; J:r.!' ;/ ",!::i r ... t ! . ; : t ' . ,,' . : A J ; t'# "" , ; .'. . fii! t .-4f iJ, . "...... ... K,{ .. .. u. I .... ';' -. ". ., ..\'d !f / !' .. J :::,\'\ ".:.:.:."-::.. .t;Â. .. . < ..;. > .--../ ....\ \.'\. ;! '. , ' :.:.:. -. \ .' \ . i. . t fi .'. ht. l r8tl\\.,J::); , ::':::: .:.,.. .A . .-:-: ;.:-" "... tt . L . .,...f 1 ;J;:rr :(.:" ;:f,' .:; , .-AW _Æ. <S..."';" ;........' . _ ..'_ l .. 'i2; = 'f '=J " :.' .. ::::.' . "::' .;t==::.:. : .. ,_. '." ':'. tÏ(t(.- ." L /'. :.:. . '<. .. .f. ....., .,. \. :t . ,%' .:::, ..... :":'.,:: ., .M' :i-^ .; . ." ,.,........".. .:.J!. . :. ;;.-: .. .,,/: ... 17 ....., t:'. . ... ::::::::::.... ...y::; ::: >. :;'" .. . .....:::;=::: . .:.::: ? : < . :::{:":l\ \{ ..'. .1';' ' . yw. . ; : , "'.' .... : \:: r;. .: "-:: $ :: "-:. :':', :::::: ., t ' t#;.;':; :Jj..,.,.,. , , \ t' . "And thank you so much for keeping your place so picturesque." and mumble something that didn't matter. Frankie was always making cracks, always tormenting her. But the time that she wanted to kill him was when she came home at four o'clock in the morning and found him there with Marline. From then on he stopped making cracks, but worse than the cracks were the looks he would give her. Always smiles. Betty wanted to give up her job. She compromised by not living with Marline any more. She got to hating the shop, which she once had liked, and even when she was working on a man's hands at some chair other than Frank- ie's, she wouldn't start a conversation, nor would she continue one that had been started. Her tips dwindled. T HIS went on for six or seven weeks. Then one day two large men with flat fat faces came in the shop. One of the barbers snapped to attention and indicated his chair, but the man who was in the lead didn't even take off his hat. He walked straight to Frankie's chair and said: "N ow no fuss, Jimmie. Finish the . . man's shave, becuss it's going to be the last you'll do for about ten years." Frankie turned around and grinned. "Well, Murph, it took yuz long enough. How's every little thing in Phillie? " Frankie finIshed the man's shave and then took off his own white coat. He went up to Dimello and whispered a few words, and Dimello reached in . his pocket and gave Frankie a couple of twenties. Frankie shook hands with him and was just about to leave. He remembered Betty "How about a little goodbye kiss, sweetheart?" Betty looked dumb for a second, and then said: "Why not?" Frankie kissed her. "Always give the ladies a break," he said, and departed.- JOHN O'HARA . OVER.50NNE T Smoke in the autumn, the cruel chemistry Of leaf and wood set burning under big trees and beyond stone walls, Smells suddenly of summer, of loam, and rain; all three To seed and blossom yield, and grow brown when the apple falls. I put out my hand. This corner of gold was maple, Coined by an angry frost, still smouldering as I touch; The field is full of the lovely and the old, the garnered staple, The leafy ruin raked in piles that burn too much. Autumn came down in the night with the wind across the orchard, Easily, far-forth, deliberate, brilliant with anvil flare: Pouring the crucibled wealth of June out of the tortured Leaves that quietly stir now and trample in the morning air. I smell the blue smoke, I smell its sweet bitter grain, Carrying foliage to the trees again. -DAVID MCCORD